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Topic: What comes after the ACA? (Read 473231 times)

Let me know if you'd like to present any "alternative facts," but I choose reality.

I didn't say there weren't ANY non-profit health insurance plans. There are even some BCBS plans that are still non-profit, just not most of them.

You said "most of the insurance companies are non-profit" and that's just not true. You can call my facts "alternative" all day long and I won't be bothered. Anybody here can spend 30 seconds on google researching this for themselves. I will stand by that ~96% number unless somebody else would like to do more research than I have done.

And this is a weird argument for you to choose, out of the ten different ways you've been refuted in this thread. Why are you so hard for non-profit insurance plans? Isn't that leaning a little too close to socialism for you?

I think it's a bit late in the discussion to continue to pretend that health insurance = healthcare.

Quite the contrary, they distinction is what (theoretically) makes plans like the ACA work.

Healthcare will never be a viable market, for reasons we've already covered. Sellers have all the power and buyers are held hostage, so no market can function. Everyone is forced to buy care, in disadvantageous situations, by the nature of being mortal.

But health INSURANCE can be a viable market. When shopping for insurance plans, people can compare rates and make decisions without the threat of immediate death hanging over their heads. Theoretically, this decoupling is what allows capitalism to work in the healthcare market at all, but removing the care from the payment for care and then letting the free market work on the payment method. This is the whole reason conservatives pushed so hard for Romneycare, because it's the only way to let capitalism control health care costs. Without it, the only viable solution (which works so well in every other westernized nation) is basically another form of socialism, and conservatives hate all things socialist (army, roads, schools, post office, etc).

Republicans killed universal health care in America in the 90s, and then eventually passed Romneycare as their preferred alternative "free market" solution. Democrats expanded their idea to other states. Now Republicans are going to kill their own idea, I guess.

But that is the point: there is no reason to 'let the market decide the cost of healthcare' - for all the reasons you mentioned. If the government is already forcing people to buy health insurance, and has to both subsidize insurance companies AND the people buying the product they forced people to buy, all while strictly regulating the product, and strictly regulating the healthcare that is purchased with the forced-to-purchase-highly-regulate-product; how exactly does the market decide anything of meaning under this system? And if we're already at this level of governmental intervention, how is it not preferable, and cheaper, to cut out the middle man (insurance - which was the fuckin' problem to begin with, and only made marginally better by the ACA)? Like roads and military and the post office, these things are not marketable, but needed, and thus should be shouldered by the government.

And rag on Republicans all you want. The Democrats had the opportunity to really change healthcare for the better. Like, really make it better - anything they could come up with they could pass. Instead, the best they could come up with was to copy what Republicans were doing and ram rod it through with only minor changes. And when it didn't solve the issue (though it worked just as planned, because it was a Republican plan -seems like this one they did get to function as designed) the best thing they could say is "Well, it was Romney's plan to begin with."

And now the Democrats are defending a broken Republican plan while Republicans are arguing among themselves on how to make it better. Meanwhile costs continue to rise at similar rates to before the magic plan. It's just madness. Time to scrap it and move towards healthcare.

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Give me one fine day of plain sailing weather and I can mess up anything.

This is what I don't get. Why can't everyone (all Americans) just get the negotiated rate -- not just the ones with the insurance company coverage.

Because that would reduce profits for private insurance companies and health care providers.

Hospitals don't want to charge everyone the same price, when there is 5% of the population out there that will voluntarily pay 20x as much for the same care. Insurance companies don't want anyone else to pay prices as low as they negotiate for their customers, because that reduces your incentive to buy their product.

The free market system dictates that prices should be variable. Capitalism demands unequal pricing. Go America!

Furthermore, the lack of transparent pricing information and customer knowledge/ability to interpret that pricing data, in addition to the inability to compare quality among providers, means that the medical providers have the advantage of more information. They alone can tell whether their price is fair or not (of course it isn't!), whether the procedure you're considering is a worthwhile investment, and so on. In fact, most providers cannot even tell you what a particular treatment or procedure will cost!

How many of you, seriously, compare doctor pricing and then visit the cheapest one?

Google tells me that there are approximately 100,000 Americans insured through non-profit health insurance companies. That's great for that particular ~3.5% of Americans, but the other 96.5% of us aren't so lucky.

That's interesting. We're in the 3.5%! I was excited to go with a non-profit this year (Aetna dropped us after being with them for 9 years).

We're finding out one reason why our plan was cheaper than the for-profit plans: a very narrow network.

My wife had a procedure scheduled for months now, and two days before it we found out that though the doctor is in network, the facility is not. Procedure cancelled. New doctor found. Now she's waiting to see the new specialist to then schedule the same procedure. Inefficiency ain't in it.

I don't think being frugal is equal to being mean spirited or selfishly only looking out for yourself while the community around you crumbles.

Thank you for for the wonderful thoughtful comment that I didn't have the words to say.

its a devils advocate statement ... can you not see that we could be slowing crumbling our society thru giving everyone medical treatment and not letting natural selection work in some instances. i'm pretty sure Stephen Hawking didnt procreate and therefore continue on his disorder. You guys cant see past this dude has this we must help everyone, assuming its for a better society as a whole. well in 200 years they may look back and say WTF were these people thinking allowing the procreation of these genetic mutations that have lead to a crumbled society. You're not looking past first quarter earnings so your stock price stays high like most companies in america do. this doesnt fully fall under the ACA or anything like that but its a fully plausible situation which everyone here isnt really taking into account.

I'm all for a single payer system. but under such a system things like this can and should be considered when giving treatment to someone who may be selfish enough to procreate and continue a disorder that should be naturally selected away.

Hmm, well the largest health insurer in the northwest would be Regence, a BCBS affiliate.

I'm assuming you're aware that BCBS isn't non-profit anymore?

Google tells me that there are approximately 100,000 Americans insured through non-profit health insurance companies. That's great for that particular ~3.5% of Americans, but the other 96.5% of us aren't so lucky.

There's a factor of ten 100 error somewhere in there. 100,000/320M american's is a lot closer to 0.35% 0.035% than it is to 3.5%.

I am having trouble researching the recent debate as to whether for-profit or non-profit entities ensure more americans.

I've been wondering how, practically speaking, this even matters. If a substantial portion of people get their health insurance through for-profit entities, and if even a portion of our nation's health care facilities are for-profit, then we have to consider how they fit into the broader discussion.

I am having trouble researching the recent debate as to whether for-profit or non-profit entities ensure more americans.

I've been wondering how, practically speaking, this even matters. If a substantial portion of people get their health insurance through for-profit entities, and if even a portion of our nation's health care facilities are for-profit, then we have to consider how they fit into the broader discussion.

In fact, it does not. I'm a CPA and a former CPA colleague of mine is a VP of Finance at a non-profit hospital. (I've also audited non-profits in the past and sit on the board of one today). This distinction means nothing for prices. Profits aren't distributed but they are ALWAYS maximized. We literally talk about margins and how to increase them at non-profit board meetings. This non-profit is also in the healthcare biz.

I am having trouble researching the recent debate as to whether for-profit or non-profit entities ensure more americans.

I've been wondering how, practically speaking, this even matters. If a substantial portion of people get their health insurance through for-profit entities, and if even a portion of our nation's health care facilities are for-profit, then we have to consider how they fit into the broader discussion.

In fact, it does not. I'm a CPA and a former CPA colleague of mine is a VP of Finance at a non-profit hospital. (I've also audited non-profits in the past and sit on the board of one today). This distinction means nothing for prices. Profits aren't distributed but they are ALWAYS maximized. We literally talk about margins and how to increase them at non-profit board meetings. This non-profit is also in the healthcare biz.

Let's move on from this point.

I would largely agree regarding why it would even matter.

Sol and CDP45 have both made a claim. One might be correct, or they both may be correct, due to complex structure like the NFL example I described up-thread. If one of them is not giving correct information and passing that off as data, that will be very helpful to me moving forward. I would even give benefit of the doubt that both are presenting accurate data, with one being more current. Sources would help with that distinction.

It sounds like an extremely easy question to answer, but yet is is hard to find out. Whenever I find it difficult to find an answer, I always wonder why. There is usually an answer that makes the confusion clear.

I personally have gone to a local ER and spent 2 nights at a billed cost of $7,000 and I paid a $500 deductible a few years ago. Now my family deductible is $3,000 via HSA with OOP max $6,700, and I would say the vast majority of people with employer sponsored health care have similar best in the world treatments with no waiting.

What do you mean by "no waiting"? If you have a non-urgent procedure - maybe a hernia repair for example - are you saying you can get it done the next day?

Just for comparison, the last time I was in the hospital was via the ER for an inflamed appendix. They removed it late that night. This was a few years ago, but IIRC, my total bill came to less than $200 and that because I asked for a private room for 2 nights. This level of care is available to any resident of Canada. Still think your employer sponsored plan is better?

Correct on the non-urgent procedures, had a hand issue that was slightly annoying just a few times per year and finally went in and doc said he was open for surgery in 2 days if I wanted to do it that soon. I honestly have never heard of any sort of waiting in the US, like for anything. MRIs, kidney stones, most just call the specialist doctor directly for an appt. Any sort of medication or drug is never unavailable. I've lived in a 1MM+ person city for 30 years and ambulances arrive within minutes of the emergency call. My young daughter had a moderate fever one night and we call her doctors office at like 7pm and they said come in first thing 730am.

And yes I think my plan is better (and the 100+ million with employer sponsored plans/group health) because in the case of a major problem there wouldn't be any waiting or rationing of care. The best care would be provided or they would refer you to where you would need to go.

The three hospitals that use stem-cell therapy to treat patients with blood disorders and aggressive cancers like the one that Sharon Shamblaw battled are unable to keep up with the soaring demand. So patients are sent to medical facilities in Buffalo, Cleveland, Ohio, and Detroit, Michigan, for the potentially life-saving treatment.

"We don't yet have the capacity to serve all the patients who require allogeneic stem-cell transplants," says Dr. Michael Sherar, president and CEO of Cancer Care Ontario, referring to the treatment that uses donor stem cells.

Im just casually googling this stuff, and I don't know if it's a fair representation, but I have never heard anyone being sent OUT of the US for treatment. I've heard of cases where maybe the CLOSEST hospital might have a longer wait than another down the road, but there still wouldn't be any waiting.

As others have noticed, there are wait times and rationing for private insurance as well.I paid additional for dental insurance. After being on it a couple years, a tooth developed a crack; I needed to remove it and according to both my dentist and oral surgeon, the best and appropriate care was a dental implant. However my insurance would only cover a bridge, not an implant. When I spoke to the representative they admitted that even though what my providers suggested I do was the standard of care, it was not covered soley due to economic reasons. So my insurance paid $100 to remove my tooth and I paid the other 5K out of pocket.

A year or two ago I was having increasing discomfort with my eyes. from February to August, I tried multiple times to schedule an appointment with my opthamologist. I would either be offered an appointment literally 3 months out, or was told to call the following month to see if there were any openings. Finally I gave up and scheduled with a doctor the next town over.My children's provider, we got a letter that she was being moved to another location (again the next town over) and to contact them to let them know if we wanted our children to continue to see that provider (and move locations) or be seen by someone closer. I sent a message to them months ago, letting them know we wanted to stick with the original provider, no response, no information how to do so.

These stories are from a very good federal insurance. I'm not complaining; the horror stories I know most are the people who are self-employed, contractors who are trying to get on insurance. It truly is a land of haves and have nots; usually if you get insurance through employer, get more coverage and more standard care. If you have to get it outside that, well good luck.

Yes there are wait times. Sometimes long. This is what happens when decisions are made to consider the health of the nation as a whole, not just one patient's.

I point out that in the U.S., in addition to a pretty strong patient lobby that would be unhappy with this idea, there is a rather strong doctor viewpoint that nobody should be interfering with their doctor/patient relationship in terms of what they are recommending for the patient. In practice, of course, insurance companies "interfere" by not covering everything, but I have almost never seen medical care providers in the US self regulate. I've seen lazy or incompetent doctors who didn't recommend things, but never one who said "we could do this procedure, but I wouldn't recommend it because it because it isn't worth it."

Despite that, it's pretty telling that virtually nobody who has experienced more than one system favors the US version of things.

Back in 2008, I ran into a woman at a party who was pretty liberal and progressive, until it came to a discussion of health care. She had had a relative die in the UK, and saved another by bringing him to the U.S. for a diagnosis he wasn't going to get in time there. She said she would never use the UK health care system. It is an anecdote, and perhaps she is in the "virtually nobody" category. For more numbers behind this, I found this article;

Which says the percentage of people satisfied with the quality of their care is identical at 31% in the U.S. and the UK, though many more in the UK are satisfied with the affordability of their care. Of course most of their cost in the UK is in taxes, which may not occur to someone drafting or responding to a poll. Also the numbers are from 2003, I would be surprised if they have not changed by now, especially since the health care system has been under heavy debate and through many changes in last few years. Finally, I have never seen systematic polls questioning only people who actually have experience with both systems.

Despite that, it's pretty telling that virtually nobody who has experienced more than one system favors the US version of things.

I didn't see this until just now.I've seen and lived with both the US and Quebec (Canada) system now. The US system has large flaws but I certainly wouldn't recommend the Canadian systems for Americans.* Both systems could be substantially improved for their constituents.

* I wouldn't recommend the US system for Canadians either. What's good for one group of people often won't fly with a different demographic.

Back in 2008, I ran into a woman at a party who was pretty liberal and progressive, until it came to a discussion of health care. She had had a relative die in the UK, and saved another by bringing him to the U.S. for a diagnosis he wasn't going to get in time there. She said she would never use the UK health care system. It is an anecdote, and perhaps she is in the "virtually nobody" category. For more numbers behind this, I found this article;

The American system has many, many flaws, but acute care isn't one of them. If you get to the right center, we're insanely good at fixing problems (or correctly diagnosing mysteries) that nobody else can handle. The problem is that not everybody can geographically get to the right tertiary center, and then they may not be able to pay for it either. If we ignore money, the best hospitals in the U.S. are among the best in the world.

Another way is to finally get to single payer and cover most healthcare costs through our progressive tax system.

Everyone here keeps saying this, and it totally makes sense, but it's never going to happen. Republicans will never allow the US government to destroy an industry that employs millions of people (and spends billions of dollars on lobbying).

The fact that many of those people would need to be re-employed by the government's version of insurance does not soothe Republicans, because their concern is for the business and not the worker. Unemployment would go up, as all of those redundant insurance adjusters and claims processors were fired from insurance companies suddenly made obsolete. You can argue that efficiency is a good thing for the economy overall, but Republicans care more about protecting corporate profits than they do about advancing the economy. They would make the same last stand for buggy whip manufacturers.

Bingo. I don't think it's so much the people employed as it is the people running the show, making absurd quantities of dollars.

Back in 2008, I ran into a woman at a party who was pretty liberal and progressive, until it came to a discussion of health care. She had had a relative die in the UK, and saved another by bringing him to the U.S. for a diagnosis he wasn't going to get in time there. She said she would never use the UK health care system. It is an anecdote, and perhaps she is in the "virtually nobody" category. For more numbers behind this, I found this article;

The American system has many, many flaws, but acute care isn't one of them. If you get to the right center, we're insanely good at fixing problems (or correctly diagnosing mysteries) that nobody else can handle. The problem is that not everybody can geographically get to the right tertiary center, and then they may not be able to pay for it either. If we ignore money, the best hospitals in the U.S. are among the best in the world.

This to me the heart of the strength of the US health care system.* Patient outcomes for complex conditions are better here than almost anywhere else. The survival rate for heart surgeries, cancer treatments, organ transplants etc are at or among the best in the world. Wait time for quality of life procedures in urban markets are a fraction of what they are in many G-20 countries.

*That, to me, are the strengths. The biggest weakness is that these only apply to people who have coverage and are near urban centers to have access to this care, and the cost of insurance in the US is overly prohibitive to a large segment of its population.

As others have noticed, there are wait times and rationing for private insurance as well.I paid additional for dental insurance. After being on it a couple years, a tooth developed a crack; I needed to remove it and according to both my dentist and oral surgeon, the best and appropriate care was a dental implant. However my insurance would only cover a bridge, not an implant. When I spoke to the representative they admitted that even though what my providers suggested I do was the standard of care, it was not covered soley due to economic reasons. So my insurance paid $100 to remove my tooth and I paid the other 5K out of pocket.

A year or two ago I was having increasing discomfort with my eyes. from February to August, I tried multiple times to schedule an appointment with my opthamologist. I would either be offered an appointment literally 3 months out, or was told to call the following month to see if there were any openings. Finally I gave up and scheduled with a doctor the next town over.My children's provider, we got a letter that she was being moved to another location (again the next town over) and to contact them to let them know if we wanted our children to continue to see that provider (and move locations) or be seen by someone closer. I sent a message to them months ago, letting them know we wanted to stick with the original provider, no response, no information how to do so.

These stories are from a very good federal insurance. I'm not complaining; the horror stories I know most are the people who are self-employed, contractors who are trying to get on insurance. It truly is a land of haves and have nots; usually if you get insurance through employer, get more coverage and more standard care. If you have to get it outside that, well good luck.

Would you rather make these decisions by reading your policy upfront and understand what is and isn't covered, and having an insurance agent help you navigate this...

Would you rather make these decisions by reading your policy upfront and understand what is and isn't covered, and having an insurance agent help you navigate this...

I don't trust an insurance agent salesman to help me navigate anything. Why would I possibly assume that someone who makes money selling me a policy would have my own best interests at heart, especially when they make MORE money denying my claims?Contracts are intentionally written to be as confusing as hell to the layperson and to offer multiple ways for the insurance company to deny coverage.

So here we go: providing health care to those previously denied it is, necessarily, a matter of redistributing from the lucky to the unlucky. And, of course, reversing a policy that expanded health care is redistribution in reverse. You canít make this reality go away.

Left to its own devices, a market economy wonít care for the sick unless they can pay for it; insurance can help up to a point, but insurance companies have no interest in covering people they suspect will get sick. So unfettered markets mean that health care goes only to those who are wealthy and/or healthy enough that they wonít need it often, and hence can get insurance.

If thatís a state of affairs youíre comfortable with, so be it. But the public doesnít share your sentiments. Health care is an issue on which most people are natural Rawlsians: they can easily imagine themselves in the position of those who, through no fault of their own, experience expensive medical problems, and feel that society should protect people like themselves from such straits.

The thing is, however, that guaranteeing health care comes with a cost. You can tell insurance companies that they canít discriminate based on medical history, but that means higher premiums for the healthy ó and you also create an incentive to stay uninsured until or unless you get sick, which pushes premiums even higher. So you have to regulate individuals as well as insurers, requiring that everyone sign up ó the mandate, And since some people wonít be able to obey such a mandate, you need subsidies, which must be paid for out of taxes.

Before the passage and implementation of the ACA, Republicans could wave all this away by claiming that health reform could never work. And even now theyíre busy telling lies about its collapse. But none of this will conceal mass loss of health care in the wake of Obamacare repeal, with some of their most loyal voters among the biggest losers.

This is what I don't get. Why can't everyone (all Americans) just get the negotiated rate -- not just the ones with the insurance company coverage.

Because that would reduce profits for private insurance companies and health care providers.

Hospitals don't want to charge everyone the same price, when there is 5% of the population out there that will voluntarily pay 20x as much for the same care. Insurance companies don't want anyone else to pay prices as low as they negotiate for their customers, because that reduces your incentive to buy their product.

The free market system dictates that prices should be variable. Capitalism demands unequal pricing. Go America!

Furthermore, the lack of transparent pricing information and customer knowledge/ability to interpret that pricing data, in addition to the inability to compare quality among providers, means that the medical providers have the advantage of more information. They alone can tell whether their price is fair or not (of course it isn't!), whether the procedure you're considering is a worthwhile investment, and so on. In fact, most providers cannot even tell you what a particular treatment or procedure will cost!

How many of you, seriously, compare doctor pricing and then visit the cheapest one?

It's difficult to get doctor's offices to actually give you a price, but I've done this each place I've lived in the last 25 years - four different towns/cities in three different states. It takes a lot of phone calls, but I eventually got prices at all locations except my current location.

So here we go: providing health care to those previously denied it is, necessarily, a matter of redistributing from the lucky to the unlucky. And, of course, reversing a policy that expanded health care is redistribution in reverse. You canít make this reality go away.

Left to its own devices, a market economy wonít care for the sick unless they can pay for it; insurance can help up to a point, but insurance companies have no interest in covering people they suspect will get sick. So unfettered markets mean that health care goes only to those who are wealthy and/or healthy enough that they wonít need it often, and hence can get insurance.

If thatís a state of affairs youíre comfortable with, so be it. But the public doesnít share your sentiments. Health care is an issue on which most people are natural Rawlsians: they can easily imagine themselves in the position of those who, through no fault of their own, experience expensive medical problems, and feel that society should protect people like themselves from such straits.

The thing is, however, that guaranteeing health care comes with a cost. You can tell insurance companies that they canít discriminate based on medical history, but that means higher premiums for the healthy ó and you also create an incentive to stay uninsured until or unless you get sick, which pushes premiums even higher. So you have to regulate individuals as well as insurers, requiring that everyone sign up ó the mandate, And since some people wonít be able to obey such a mandate, you need subsidies, which must be paid for out of taxes.

Before the passage and implementation of the ACA, Republicans could wave all this away by claiming that health reform could never work. And even now theyíre busy telling lies about its collapse. But none of this will conceal mass loss of health care in the wake of Obamacare repeal, with some of their most loyal voters among the biggest losers.

I'll go back to my denial of the Hep-C cure by Canada, I'm sure Krugman "the state can do no wrong unless my team isn't in-charge" would happily carry water for this decision.

But insurance is risk transfer, and that's what insurance does in other lines of coverage (auto, home, liability, etc) and there doesn't seem to be a crisis there...hmm wonder what the difference could be.

Well that's outside the box! I like it. It's vaguely possible the private insurance companies the government would be paying would be more efficient cost effective than a government bureaucracy doing the same thing.

Nobody seemed terribly excited about it, but I still think it's the easiest fix.

No body was terribly excited about it because it keeps the worst part of the system (insurance) and does nothing to address costs or increase healthcare outcomes. It's the same system as we have now, only you get a bill from the government when the insurance company denies your claim instead of a bill from the hospital.

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Give me one fine day of plain sailing weather and I can mess up anything.

Nobody seemed terribly excited about it, but I still think it's the easiest fix.

I guess I don't really see much of a difference between this and the ACA. The only major difference is the additional step of collecting taxes to pay premiums rather than the consumer paying less in taxes and paying premiums themselves. How would that bring about different results?

But insurance is risk transfer, and that's what insurance does in other lines of coverage (auto, home, liability, etc) and there doesn't seem to be a crisis there...hmm wonder what the difference could be.

I'd say there are quite a few differences but let's just start with one. Most of the other lines of coverage are required one way or another. Either by statute (auto), the lender (home...since most people finance their homes), or business contracts (liability).

With health insurance...we had no such mandate pre-ACA. Left to their own devices, we know people make the sub-optimal choice to go without and stiff the system and conversely you and I, the premium payers. I understand that the mandate is not ideologically palatable to some folks but how else do you prevent a death spiral if we refuse to deny care. Or should we start denying care based on ability to pay?

Aggressive, cost conscious government negotiators start removing the worst of the entitlements and egregious over-charging. Things get better every year.

In an alternative scenario, experienced negotiators for the insurance companies slowly start jacking up premiums with individual justifications that are hard to argue. Lobbying reaches new lows with bribes being provided to committee members responsible for health care. The US tax-payer gets shafted.

But insurance is risk transfer, and that's what insurance does in other lines of coverage (auto, home, liability, etc) and there doesn't seem to be a crisis there...hmm wonder what the difference could be.

I'd say there are quite a few differences but let's just start with one. Most of the other lines of coverage are required one way or another. Either by statute (auto), the lender (home...since most people finance their homes), or business contracts (liability).

With health insurance...we had no such mandate pre-ACA. Left to their own devices, we know people make the sub-optimal choice to go without and stiff the system and conversely you and I, the premium payers. I understand that the mandate is not ideologically palatable to some folks but how else do you prevent a death spiral if we refuse to deny care. Or should we start denying care based on ability to pay?

How exactly did the ACA solve this death spiral? Now the priemuim payers are still paying for care through taxes and higher premiums - the people who can't pay still don't. Only now instead of the profits going to the hospitals who had to charge more to cover write-offs, they are going to the insurances companies. It's just shifted the money around, without changing the system meaningfully, except that now people that would have been too sick to get coverage before are now able to not pay into the system, which they never did anyway. From a financial standpoint the ACA didn't improve things much.

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Give me one fine day of plain sailing weather and I can mess up anything.

I agree that the ACA didn't do much to improve the financial arrangements of American healthcare. It did some, and was built to phase in more changes over time, but it didn't dramatically reshape the payment landscape.

But it did provide health insurance, and thus better care, to tens of millions of Americans who were previously unable to see a doctor except by visiting an emergency room. That's not nothing. That legitimately Made America Greater.

Maybe we need to return to valuing something other than just dollars. America isn't only great because it is wealthy.

So the news this morning is that the Republicans now want to "repair" the ACA rather than replace it. Or if you listen to Paul Ryan, they want to "repeal, replace, AND repair." Wonder what that means. The floundering would be comical if there weren't so much at stake.

So the news this morning is that the Republicans now want to "repair" the ACA rather than replace it. Or if you listen to Paul Ryan, they want to "repeal, replace, AND repair." Wonder what that means. The floundering would be comical if there weren't so much at stake.

I think the GOP's best strategy at this point is just to hope the public gets distracted with other things for the next 3.8 years. They've vilified the existing law and over-promised about what they'll do, how much it will cost and what it will cover.

Going forward they'll need to defend on those three fronts: Cost, Coverage and Care.You can be great on two of those, but not all three.

But insurance is risk transfer, and that's what insurance does in other lines of coverage (auto, home, liability, etc) and there doesn't seem to be a crisis there...hmm wonder what the difference could be.

I'd say there are quite a few differences but let's just start with one. Most of the other lines of coverage are required one way or another. Either by statute (auto), the lender (home...since most people finance their homes), or business contracts (liability).

With health insurance...we had no such mandate pre-ACA. Left to their own devices, we know people make the sub-optimal choice to go without and stiff the system and conversely you and I, the premium payers. I understand that the mandate is not ideologically palatable to some folks but how else do you prevent a death spiral if we refuse to deny care. Or should we start denying care based on ability to pay?

How exactly did the ACA solve this death spiral? Now the priemuim payers are still paying for care through taxes and higher premiums - the people who can't pay still don't. Only now instead of the profits going to the hospitals who had to charge more to cover write-offs, they are going to the insurances companies. It's just shifted the money around, without changing the system meaningfully, except that now people that would have been too sick to get coverage before are now able to not pay into the system, which they never did anyway. From a financial standpoint the ACA didn't improve things much.

I think you're jumping to conclusions. I never claimed the ACA did prevent a death spiral. My argument is that while the mandate may be unpopular - it is also necessary in whatever new system will be enacted. Otherwise you'll have pretty much the same setup we had before - healthy and wealthy get care and pay and the rest of the population suffers until they are forced to consume extremely expensive care that they cannot afford - so it's absorbed and the rates increase for the payers at an above inflation pace.

I will say that the mandate DID make ACA viable at least temporarily. Since the law didn't really address cost drivers, we are still at risk of a death spiral and rates are still increasing rather fast.

So the news this morning is that the Republicans now want to "repair" the ACA rather than replace it. Or if you listen to Paul Ryan, they want to "repeal, replace, AND repair." Wonder what that means. The floundering would be comical if there weren't so much at stake.

How can you repair something you've repealed?

It's all just messaging and probably has little to no connection to whatever path they actually plan to take. Apparently Paul Ryan has now clarified that the "repair" of the healthcare system (as the Republican efforts have apparently now been rebranded) still means the "repeal and replacement" of the ACA.

For me personally, tax credits and an HSA that I can put enough money into might work well. As long as the high deductible insurance that goes with it is actually worth a damn.

Aw man I tried reading the whole thing but couldn't get past the "advanceable refundable tax credit" for poor folks to then go out and shop for insurance "like I am" (Phil Roe, that is). What a crock of $hit - excuse my language.

Just like most people on here, this would probably work out great for me. I know my way around money and have a lot of it to start. But why do we keep pushing this ridiculous narrative that more choices are somehow a good thing for everyone. Those poor folks who do not have an income tax liability today are likely to make a sub-optimal choice when purchasing cheese, buying Kraft "processed cheese product" instead of the real thing. How in the world can we expect average people to understand insurance contracts? I know not everyone is stupid. But shopping for insurance is something only a small fraction of the population can do effectively. Any plan that touts "access" and "shopping for insurance" will cause some serious harm to those who need the most help.

I think the aspect of the liberal mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too stupid to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should take care of everyone.

I think the aspect of the liberal mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too stupid to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should take care of everyone.

I think the aspect of the liberal mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too stupid to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should take care of everyone.

In the context of this thread, who is making that suggestion?

Personally I think there's a more fundamental reason why the government should be responsible for providing health care to its citizens, and that's because for-profit companies have an inherent conflict of interest against providing insurance to sick people and against paying out claims in general. It's not in a private insurer's best interests to insure individuals that have a high likelihood of costing them a lot of money.

We could minimize these conflicts by placing strict regulations and oversight of private companies, but then we are already moving towards a system that is controlled by the government. This argues for some level of government care.

I think the aspect of the liberal mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too stupid to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should take care of everyone.

I think the aspect of the conservative mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too immoral to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should make decisions about a person's actions or body.

I think the aspect of the liberal mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too stupid to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should take care of everyone.

I think the aspect of the conservative mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too immoral to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should make decisions about a person's actions or body.

I agree that the ACA didn't do much to improve the financial arrangements of American healthcare. It did some, and was built to phase in more changes over time, but it didn't dramatically reshape the payment landscape.

But it did provide health insurance, and thus better care, to tens of millions of Americans who were previously unable to see a doctor except by visiting an emergency room. That's not nothing. That legitimately Made America Greater.

Maybe we need to return to valuing something other than just dollars. America isn't only great because it is wealthy.

While I agree that money should not be a primary driver in healthcare in theory, the fact remains that any plan does have to be financially feasible, at a minimum. The ACA did not address this - though, as you have pointed out, it did attempt to, just did so poorly.

And there were clearly some positive ideas in the ACA. Thankfully the controlling party states they want to keep them in the reform. (Though, who knows, I guess.)

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Give me one fine day of plain sailing weather and I can mess up anything.

I think the aspect of the liberal mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too stupid to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should take care of everyone.

I think the aspect of the conservative mindset that pisses me off the most is the idea that people are simply too immoral to take care of themselves. I see this all the time. They use it to justify the idea that the government should make decisions about a person's actions or body.

For me personally, tax credits and an HSA that I can put enough money into might work well. As long as the high deductible insurance that goes with it is actually worth a damn.

Aw man I tried reading the whole thing but couldn't get past the "advanceable refundable tax credit" for poor folks to then go out and shop for insurance "like I am" (Phil Roe, that is). What a crock of $hit - excuse my language.

Just like most people on here, this would probably work out great for me. I know my way around money and have a lot of it to start. But why do we keep pushing this ridiculous narrative that more choices are somehow a good thing for everyone. Those poor folks who do not have an income tax liability today are likely to make a sub-optimal choice when purchasing cheese, buying Kraft "processed cheese product" instead of the real thing. How in the world can we expect average people to understand insurance contracts? I know not everyone is stupid. But shopping for insurance is something only a small fraction of the population can do effectively. Any plan that touts "access" and "shopping for insurance" will cause some serious harm to those who need the most help.

I don't automatically assume poor people are dumb, or are incapable to making good choices when presented with options, or are likely to make sub-optimal choices based on an arbitrary metric. I hardly see why people who think that others can't make good choices should be allowed to make choices for those people that they look down upon. It is a very narrow view that seems pretty is incredibly condescending, and does not do anything to address the underlying problem of why some people sometimes make sub-optimal choices. The correct answer is not to remove access to choices that are good for some people and only offer choices that are ok for everyone. The answer is to educate people on their choices and to simplify the complex system to the point that more people can make good choices.

Logged

Give me one fine day of plain sailing weather and I can mess up anything.